The Crisis of Democracy
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- Publication date
- 1975
- Topics
- Cold War, Activism, Noam Chomsky, Trilateral Commission
- Collection
- opensource
- Language
- English
- Item Size
- 258.9M
Along with the notorious "Powell Memo", 'The Crisis of Democracy' was a document produced by the American Establishment which sought to come to grips with the rising levels of activism and dissent in the United States during the '60s/'70s. Noam Chomsky often mentions these two documents together as emblematic of establishment worry over an increase in popular participation in the USA.
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Full text, added here for completeness of this archive. Original upload: https://archive.org/details/TheCrisisOfDemocracy-TrilateralCommission-1975 by bsanandaATyahooDOTcom
REPORT ON THE GOVERNABILITY OF DEMOCRACIES TO THE TRILATERAL COMMISSION
The Crisis Of Democracy
Michel Crozier Samuel P. Huntington Joji Watanuki
Report on the Governability of Democracies to the Trilateral Commission
Published by New York University Press
The Trilateral Commission was formed in 1973 by private citizens of Western Europe, Japan, and North America to foster closer cooperation among these three regions on common problems. It seeks to improve public understanding of such problems, to support proposals for handling them jointly, and to nurture habits and practices of working together among these regions.
Copyright ® 1975 by The Trilateral Commission
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 75-27167 ISBN: 0-8147-1364-5 (cloth) 0-8147-1305-3 (paper)
Manufactured in the United States of America 9 8 7 6 5
INTRODUCTORY NOTE
Is democracy in crisis? This question is being posed with increasing urgency by some of the leading statesmen of the West, by columnists and scholars, and— if public opinion polls are to be trusted— even by the publics. In some respects, the mood of today is reminiscent of that of the early twenties, when the views of Oswald Spengler regarding "The Decline of the West" were highly popular. This pessimism is echoed, with obvious Schadenfreude, by various communist observers, who speak with growing confidence of "the general crisis of capitalism" and who see in it the confirmation of their own theories.
The report which follows is not a pessimistic document. Its authors believe that, in a fundamental sense, the democratic systems are viable. They believe, furthermore, that democracies can work provided their publics truly understand the nature of the democratic system, and particularly if they are sensitive to the subtle interrelationship between liberty and responsibility. Their discussion of "The Crisis of Democracy" is designed to make democracy stronger as it grows and becomes more and more democratic. Their conclusions-doubtless in some respects provocative— are designed to serve that overriding objective.
The Trilateral Commission decided to undertake this project because it has felt, rightly in my view, that the vitality of our political systems is a central precondition for the shaping of a stable international order and for the fashioning of more cooperative relations among our regions. Though very much concerned with issues pertaining to foreign affairs, trilateral as well as East -West and North-South, the Trilateral Commission has promoted the study which follows in the belief that at this juncture it is important for the citizens of our democracies to reexamine the basic premises and the workings of our systems. This rethinking can contribute, it is our hope, to the promotion of the central purposes of the democratic system of government: the combination of personal liberty with the enhancement of social progress.
This report has been prepared for the Trilateral Commission and is released under its auspices. The Commission is making the report available for wider distribution as a contribution to informed discussion and handling of the issues treated. The report was discussed at the Trilateral Commission meetings in Kyoto, Japan, on May 30-31, 1975. The authors, who are experts from North America, Western Europe and Japan, have been free to present their own views.
The report is the joint responsibility of the three rapporteurs of the Trilateral Commission's Task Force on the Governability of Democracies, which was set up in the spring of 1974 and which submitted its report in the spring of 1975. The chapter on Japan is the work of Joji Watanuki. The chapter on Western Europe is the work of Michel Crozier. The chapter on the United States is the work of Samuel P. Huntington.
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- 2017-04-29 15:16:31
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- crisis_of_democracy
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Reviews
(1)
Reviewer:
Zolan0501
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December 1, 2021
Subject: The Most Evil Book I've Ever Read
Subject: The Most Evil Book I've Ever Read
Natural scientists have the heart to reject their role in the creation of the atomic bomb. Economists and political scientists by the many have yet to
...
see the immorality of writing papers on how to starve entire nations through financial sanctions & knowing when to up defense spending to suppress & prevent "excesses of democracy."
I still give it 5 stars because of how well-researched it is. I'd still recommend the most moral and well-meaning social scienists read it so we can descriptvly scorn those who sold-out, and continue to inspire the question "how could they would write such a thing?"
I still give it 5 stars because of how well-researched it is. I'd still recommend the most moral and well-meaning social scienists read it so we can descriptvly scorn those who sold-out, and continue to inspire the question "how could they would write such a thing?"
There is 1 review for this item. .
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